Prom night was supposed to be forgettable, until I stepped out in a dress stitched from my dad’s old uniform. My stepfamily laughed, but a knock at the door changed everything. That night, I discovered the truth about loyalty, loss, and the power of taking back my own story.
The first night I started stitching, my fingers were shaking so hard that I jabbed the needle clean through my thumb. I bit down on a yelp, wiped the blood away, and kept going, careful not to let a single drop stain the olive fabric laid out on my quilt.
I bit down on a yelp, wiped the blood away, and kept going.
If Camila or her daughters caught me with Dad’s old uniform, I knew they’d never let me hear the end of it.
Dad’s jacket was frayed at the cuffs, the edges soft from years of wear.
I’d buried my face in it the night we learned he wasn’t coming home, breathing in traces of his aftershave, salt, and something like machine oil.
Now, every snip of my scissors and tug of thread felt like stitching myself back together.
I knew they’d never let me hear the end of it.
***
I didn’t grow up dreaming of prom. Not like my stepsisters, Lia and Jen did, anyway.
One Saturday morning, I walked into the kitchen and found Lia hunched over a pile of magazines, markers scattered everywhere.
“Chelsea, which one do you like better? Strapless or a sweetheart neckline?” she asked, waving a page in my direction.
Before I could answer, Jen popped a grape into her mouth. “Why bother asking her? She’ll probably go in one of her dad’s flannel shirts or one of her mother’s ancient dresses.”
I didn’t grow up dreaming of prom.
I shrugged, trying to sound casual. “I’m not sure, Lia. I think they’ll both look great on you. I haven’t thought about prom yet.”
Lia grinned. “You really don’t have a plan? It’s like, the most important night ever.”
I just smiled, but inside I was thinking about Dad teaching me to patch a torn sleeve, his big hands guiding mine at the sewing machine.
Back then, it was just Dad and me, and after Mom died, those small moments became everything.
“You really don’t have a plan?”
The house changed after Dad married Camila. Suddenly, there were two stepsisters, and Camila’s fake affection whenever Dad was around.
But the minute he left for duty, her smile faded. My “chores” doubled, and Lia and Jen started dropping laundry outside my door.
Sometimes I’d stand in Dad’s closet, hold his old jacket to my chest, and whisper, “Miss you, Dad.”
“You’ll make me proud, Chels,” I imagined he’d say. “Whatever you do, wear it like you mean it.”
The house changed after Dad married Camila.
***
It was that night I decided I’d wear his uniform to prom. Not the way it was, but transformed, something new built from what he left behind. It felt like a secret between us.
For weeks, I worked in silence.
After scrubbing the kitchen floor and folding Jen’s endless stacks of shirts, I’d retreat to my room and stitch under my desk lamp.
Sometimes, in the quiet, I’d whisper goodnight to Dad.
I decided I’d wear his uniform to prom.
One Saturday afternoon, I was hunched over my desk, thread in my mouth and Dad’s jacket spread out in front of me, when my door flew open.
Jen barged in without so much as a knock, arms overflowing with pastel dresses and tangled straps.
I startled, yanking the blanket over my project so fast I nearly sent the sewing box flying.
“Careful, Jen!”
She cocked an eyebrow, peering at the lumpy shape beneath the blanket. “What are you hiding, Cinderella?” Her lips curled in a smirk as she dropped the armful of dresses right onto my feet.
“What are you hiding, Cinderella?”
“Nothing,” I said, forcing a yawn and glancing at my open math book. “Just homework.”
She snorted. “Yeah, right. Whatever.” She dug out a wrinkled mint dress and shoved it at me. “Lia needs this steamed by tonight. And don’t burn anything, she’ll freak.”
“Got it.”
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